Only Australian citizens can join the Australian army. www.defencejobs.gov should answer all questions about the army and its jobs
No. citizenship has to do with where you were born, and where your parents were born. It has nothing to do with marriage.
Being an African American does not necessarily mean they have duel citizenship. In general, countries define citizenship based on ones descent, place of birth, marriage, and/or naturalization. An example of duel citizenship is when, lets say, an Australian citizen travels to the United States, marries a United States citizen and has children. Those children have both, US and Australian citizenship. The Term African American really comes from the slave trade when Africans were transported by ship to the Americas, in which they became, "African Americans." The African Americans today did not have a choice to be "African Americans" because their ancestors were brought here. Thus, the term 'African American' is not racist in anyway but more politically correct and duel citizenship does not apply to all African Americans.
Duel citizenship is not forbidden in the United States. There is no reason that this would be impossible. Wikipedia has a page on that (United_States_nationality_law#Dual_citizenship)
Ask at http://cetatenie.just.ro/.
You may be eligible. The laws changed in Apr.2009 and many gained Canadian citizenship as a result. Contact the Canadian high commission or consulate general nearest to you and they will assist you.
Yes you can be a duel citizen of Vietnam and the USA. My son is. He was born in Vietnam, mother is Vietnamese and I am American. So, he has an American passport and |He has a Vietnamese birth certificate both. Therefore, duel citizen.
The United States Government does not recognized "dual citizenship". The government puts people in 2 categories: 1. U.S. citzens 2. Aliens
If the parents are US citizens, then the child gets duel citizenship (citizenship in the country he/she is born in [depending on local laws], and US citizenship). Any person naturalized in the US or by American parents is a US citizen.
Your child will be an American citizen automatically because American parents = American child. However, the Italian law is different than ours. You are not Italian just because you are born in Italy. if you are born in Italy to foreign parents, and you reside there until you are 18, then you can apply for citizenship. At that point, the child can be a duel citizen (the US now recognizes duel citizenship).
They are considered a citizen from birth. Depending upon the location of birth, and/or the citizenship of their parents, they may have an option as to what country they are a citizen of up to the point they become an adult, usually 18 or 21, being duel citizens up to that point.
Yes, I believe he does.